About 50 people paid $50 each to attend a breakfast with Coulter, and about 300 attended book-signing that did not charge
admission.

From the onset at the book-signing, Coulter made punchlines out of President Barack Obama, Anthony Weiner, Bill Clinton, Kwame
Kilpatrick, Osama bin Laden and others.

Her candid observations were delivered similar to the routine of a standup comedian and yielded the same results from a partisan
and appreciative audience.

Coulter, 49, condemned America's involvement in Libya and Afghanistan. Of the latter, she said it's a terrible country with
no natural resources, no oil and 70 percent of its people are illiterate.

"There are more goats in Afghanistan than there are flush toilets," she said. "If Obama is so interested in getting rid of
dictators, why doesn't he start with (U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security) Janet Napolitano?"

Coulter, a University of Michigan law school
alumna, kept the mood light and the audience laughing by dishing out
more observations and opinions.

She said contrary to what Obama has said, the killing Osama bin Laden is not the end of terrorism.

"No more than killing Kenny Rogers would be the end of country music," she said. "(Al-Qaida) has vowed revenge and they're
really ticked off at us. What were they before, just moody?"

Regarding the care that terrorist prisoners receive at Guantanamo Bay, Coulter said health coverage, exercise, eight hours
of sleep and three meals daily shows the prisoners are living better than many free Americans do. Coulter said she's been
treated worse at Holiday Inn Express.

Looking ahead to presidential elections next
year and in the future, Coulter said the Republicans boast "a strong
farm team," led by New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. Coulter made no
secret her support for Christie as a Republican candidate for president
next year.

His only flaw, she said, is that "he's too normal to run for president." Coulter also acknowledged Mitt Romney as a viable
candidate.

Battle Creek resident J.D. Davis, 67, said he was impressed with Coulter's presentation and appreciated her humorous spin.

"I appreciate her strong conservative principles and straight talk," he said. "I've always wondered why Congress doesn't stand
up to the president ... I have respect for the president's position but the laws that govern the people should be the same
laws that govern the president as well."

Davis said he is frustrated that high-profile elected positions, including president, are filled by people who have made a
career out of being self-serving politicians.

"That's why I'd vote for a guy like (chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City) Herman Cain. He's just a regular
guy, a smart businessman who would make a good president because he's not a politician," Davis said.

Kim Robbins, 43, also from Battle Creek, said she is tired of politicians who say one thing when they run for office and do
another once they're elected. Robbins said she shared many of the same views on the world and politics as those expressed
by Coulter.

"A lot of decisions made right now will have an
impact on my kids 10, 20, 30 years form now, and I don't think a lot of
(politicians) look that far forward," Robbins said.

"I try to have open-minded discussions with my
oldest kids about Democrats and Republicans, why they make the
decisions they do and what they stand for ... it's important because my
kids will be the next generation impacted by what happens under Obama
and the next president."